10 Biggest Gadget Design Fails
5. Creaky, Catch-prone Laptop Hinges
There's nothing you do more often than lift the lid on your laptop, so you better make sure that this operation is smooth. Unfortunately, I've seen a fair number of thin Ultrabooks whose lids either creak when opening — or worse — literally catch on the bottom part of the clamshell on the way up. Both the HP Envy 4t and 6z exhibited this troubling design flaw in our testing
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August 8th, 2012 at 4:43 pm
I want to add something: The Sony Vaio S series, which is otherwise beautifully designed and packed with useful features has a pretty noisy fan… and why? Cause when you raise the laptop’s display lid, the lower edge of the display pivots down behind the laptop, partially blocking the freaking cooling vents!
Still, I think you have to forgive companies not to follow every reviewers pet complaint. I’m not actually taking issue with what you mentioned here, but there are other things:
A lot of reviewers keep marking laptops down if most of the connectors are in the rear instead of on the sides. Just because they’re too lazy to move their clumsy hands behind the laptop to plug something in, they are expecting the rest of us should prefer our desks left and right of the notebook to turn into a snakes nest of cables?
We use the space next to our laptops for work stuff! And the mouse, of course, which is much easier to use when there aren’t a bunch of cables criss-crossing the area.
I’d say connectors belong in the rear! Maybe a card reader, a headset jack and MAYBE one USB port for the super lazy could be on the side, but that’s about it.
August 8th, 2012 at 9:01 pm
I couldn’t disagree more, Tsais. If you use your laptop only a desk, I suppose having the ports in the rear isn’t that bad. But if you’re going to be mobile, it’s just a pain to have to reach around the back. Even when stationary it just requires more effort than is necessary. If you want a more streamlined solution a dock is good for that.
November 25th, 2012 at 11:43 am
I think a big design fail in Windows based laptops these days is cooling.
The word “laptop” suggests its intended usage….but when the air intake is on the bottom, you only suffocate your CPU of cooling when you use it on your lap, or any non-rigid surface.
I do call testing in my vehicle. I need to carry a square piece of MDF on my passenger seat in order to allow the PC to remain cool. And even the gap from the standoffs is not enough. I often have to prop my Dell up on something to allow better air intake.
I’ve seen this in Dells, HPs, Compaqs…but not Apple where the intake is in the back side assembly.
January 5th, 2013 at 12:13 am
The protective dust covers are to keep dust and other micro contaminants out of your systems hardware which can pernanately damage tour device